ORCID

Abstract

BackgroundPeople with intellectual disability (ID) experience poorer health outcomes than the general population, with epilepsy and polypharmacy contributing to further risks. Bone health is a neglected area, despite the established association between antiseizure medications (ASMs), especially those cautioned by the UK Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA), and reduced bone mineral density. We aimed to evaluate prescribing practices, fracture risk, and bone health management in adults with ID and epilepsy attending specialist ID services.MethodsA cross-sectional study was conducted across three English specialist ID epilepsy services between August 2021–August 2022. Data were collected from case-note review, including ASM prescribing, falls and fracture history, bone health monitoring, and protective treatments. Descriptive statistics, Chi-squared and Mann-Whitney U tests were conducted. Logistic regression was used to examine associations between ASM use and fracture risk.ResultsOf 484 adults were analysed almost all (97%) were prescribed ≥1 ASM, with 18% receiving four or more and 63% receiving at least one MHRA-cautioned ASM. Over 25% on MHRA-cautioned ASMs had a history of fractures, yet 38% received no bone-protective treatment. Patients with severe-profound ID were prescribed significantly more ASMs than those with mild-moderate ID. Each additional ASM increased fracture risk by 37%, and each additional MHRA-cautioned ASM by 43%.ConclusionsAdults with ID and epilepsy are frequently exposed to polypharmacy, including bone health–compromising ASMs, yet bone health monitoring and treatment remain suboptimal. Targeted strategies and ID-specific guidance are urgently required to reduce fracture risk and improve outcomes in this vulnerable group.

Publication Date

2025-10-26

Publication Title

Seizure: European Journal of Epilepsy

ISSN

1059-1311

Deposit Date

2025-10-26

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

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